That's a lot of money! Do you mind if I ask where you saw that figure?It all cost £43000 though - which is a lot. But maybe that's what branding and websites cost these days?!
Sure it's on their websiteThat's a lot of money! Do you mind if I ask where you saw that figure?
Thanks! Wow, these things cost a bit. But I suppose that if they're getting a quarter of a million visits a year, it's worth a one-off investment to fix it up.Sure it's on their website
https://www.actionforme.org.uk/our-new-website/
It is for much bigger organisationsThe website is better organised but not sure on the new logo. It all cost £43000 though - which is a lot. But maybe that's what branding and websites cost these days?!
I don’t think it’s that expensive.
The website is better organised but not sure on the new logo.
I agree. It looks like a blob, there's not much action implicit in that. It's also high contrast and the words are jammed up against each other and in caps, making it hard for readability. Is AfME the light at the end of the tunnel? A bright spot in the sea of darkness that is ME? Still, it's just a logo.
I think the logo is unhelpful. I can understand Action for ME continuing to use the term 'ME' on grounds of continuity but isolating it in orange like that is a bad idea.
It is time we moved away from talking of 'ME'. It was an idea for an illness that isn't even the one we are interested in and turned out probably not to be what was claimed. It is also associated in the public mind with yuppie flu and self-diagnosed tiredness.
And the style hardly makes the organisation look serious and authoritative.
I see your point, but what are our charities to do?
Fair point! I just googled 'medical charity logo UK' and clicked on 'Images' and saw a whole load of (admittedly boring) logos where the medical condition isn't emphasised in the design. It could have been done.You miss my point, Sasha. I am not suggesting that AfME change their name. I am just saying that it doesn't help to now have the 'ME" scrawled in bright orange. Until quite recently the major US journal for rheumatology was called 'Arthritis and Rheumatism' despite everyone agreeing that rheumatism was a meaningless term about fifty years ago. It is as if the journal rebranded itself with the 'rheumatism' in huge wonky orange writing. Nobody would ever take it seriously again.
Doesn't look or feel like a professional makeover when this is the first page that comes up:
I can dream